Janhvi Kapoor Sparks Industry Debate Over Tollywood Human-Centric Schedules

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Janhvi Kapoor
Janhvi Kapoor

New Delhi, June 2, 2026: The ongoing national conversation surrounding grueling work hours and labor reforms in Indian cinema has found a fresh, influential voice. While promoting her upcoming highly anticipated sports action drama Peddi—where she stars alongside Ram Charan as Achiyamma—actress Janhvi Kapoor sparked widespread discussion by drawing a sharp contrast between the work cultures of Mumbai and Hyderabad. Specifically, Kapoor lauded the Telugu film industry (Tollywood) for its strict adherence to human-centric schedules, emphasizing that the industry actively prioritizes the physical well-being of not just its stars, but its entire crew.

“What I really appreciate about specifically the Telugu film industry is their respect for everyone’s working hours,” Kapoor shared in an appearance on Times Now. “Not just the actors, but also the technicians and the crew members. A lunch break means everyone can go have lunch for 40 minutes and nap for 20 minutes, and come back to work feeling fresh.”

The actress further revealed that excessive 12-hour shifts were a rarity during her South Indian projects, occurring only once or twice across her filming experiences, which include Devara: Part 1 and the upcoming Peddi. Instead, a typical Tollywood workday spans a regulated nine to ten hours. Even notoriously difficult night shoots follow strict boundaries. “A night shoot always ends at 2:00 AM so you are rested,” Kapoor noted, adding that such boundaries are frequently “compromised back home” in Mumbai, where scheduling integrity largely depends on the whims of individual film sets.

Her remarks come at a highly sensitive time for the entertainment fraternity, following high-profile dropouts and growing pushback from major stars over systemic overwork. As the industry grapples with these labor dynamics, organizational and clinical psychologists have weighed in, validating Kapoor’s observations and warning that the entertainment industry’s historic glorification of sleeplessness is actively counterproductive.

The Anatomy of Rest: Why the 20-Minute Nap Matters

To the uninitiated, a 20-minute nap on a chaotic film set might sound like a luxury. However, workplace mental health experts view it as a critical physiological necessity, especially in high-stress, creatively demanding environments.

Gurleen Baruah, an organizational psychologist at That Culture Thing, explains that ultra-long work hours do not translate to better output. Instead, they systematically degrade the human operating system. “Very long work hours slowly exhaust the system,” Baruah says. “The brain doesn’t get time to reset, so focus drops and mistakes increase. Decision-making becomes rushed or rigid because the mind is tired, not sharp. Emotionally too, people become more irritable, numb, or reactive because there’s no space to process stress.”

Psychological research into sleep architecture supports this. A 20-minute rest—often referred to as a “power nap”—allows an individual to enter stage 2 sleep, which enhances alertness, memory consolidation, and motor skills without causing “sleep inertia,” the heavy, groggy feeling that occurs when waking up from a deeper sleep cycle.

Baruah notes that when an industry fails to build these micro-rests into its daily schedule, it enters a cycle of diminishing returns. “What starts as working more to get things done often becomes counter-productive. Burnout, poor judgment, and emotional fatigue follow, and performance actually goes down, not up. Humans are not machines. Even machines need charging.”

Creative Chaos vs. The Corporate ‘Excel Sheet’

Interestingly, Kapoor’s co-star, Telugu superstar Ram Charan, offered a counter-perspective during their joint promotions, expressing a deep admiration for Bollywood’s highly organized, time-bound corporate structure. He noted that Hindi cinema is often praised for completing projects swiftly and strictly “on time.”

Kapoor agreed that Mumbai sets are incredibly organized, but noted that this structure can sometimes border on a fault, leading to “creative compromises.” In contrast, she described Telugu film sets as being driven primarily by raw passion and a willingness to let the creative process breathe—paradoxically achieving this organic flow while strictly respecting the human limits of the crew.

The Psychological Toll of the “Always-On” Culture

The glamorized hustle of the entertainment industry often masks severe psychological vulnerabilities. Behind the scenes, technicians, light boys, and junior artists frequently bear the brunt of erratic schedules, working in environments where continuous 14-hour days are worn like a badge of honor.

According to Rima Bhandekar, a senior psychologist at the Mpower Helpline (Aditya Birla Education Trust), breaking away from this toxic cycle requires an intentional shift in perspective from leadership. “Making time for self-care, exercise, hobbies, and quality moments with loved ones can significantly contribute to emotional well-being and overall life satisfaction,” Bhandekar notes. She urges professionals across all high-pressure fields to mindfully embrace a sustainable rhythm of work and rest to ensure long-term progress without sacrificing mental and physical longevity.

Bhandekar also points out that breaking out of an overwork routine is incredibly difficult for individuals who have been conditioned to tie their self-worth strictly to endless productivity. “Sometimes, individuals find it difficult to come out of the rut of excessive focus on work, and may not know where to start,” she warns, suggesting that organizational interventions and expert guidance are often necessary to shift workplace momentum.

Ultimately, Janhvi Kapoor’s praise for Tollywood serves as a crucial case study for the wider Indian entertainment fraternity. By demonstrating that high-budget, commercially blockbuster cinema can be successfully produced within disciplined, respectful timeframes, the Telugu industry challenges the long-standing myth that great art requires human exploitation. True productivity, as the experts emphasize, is not born from exhaustion—it is fueled by rest.

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